Police officers issued a total of 725 tickets on Staten Island during a recent crackdown on hazardous driving.

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. - A look at the number of tickets issued during a recent NYPD crackdown on hazardous driving revealed some interesting -- if not disturbing -- trends about Staten Island motorists.

The citywide effort, which ran from May 26 to June 1, targeted select precincts, including the North Shore's 120th Precinct, and the 121st Precinct, which covers parts of the North and West shores. Click here for a breakdown on summonses issued.

Here are five interesting trends:

Our drivers are the worst. The 466 tickets issued in the 121 was higher than the number of summonses issued in any other precinct involved in the crackdown, according to the stats released. The next highest was 418 in Brooklyn's 70th precinct.

We still haven't gotten the message about distracted driving. Out of a total number of 259 summonses issued in the 120 Precinct, 107 were for use of mobile devices. (71 for phone, 36 for text.) That number is good for 41 percent of the total number of tickets issued there.

We don't follow signs. In the 121st Precinct, 239 drivers were ticketed for disobeying traffic signs -- good for a whopping 51 percent of the precinct's total number of tickets. In the 120, the number was 58, good for a more modest 22 percent.

Maybe drivers here aren't as inconsiderate of pedestrians as recent headlines suggest, at least according to this crackdown. Just four tickets were issued for the failure to yield to a pedestrian in the 120, and 12 were issued in the 121.

There is disparity in the violations. Sixty-nine more tickets were issued for improper turns in the 121 than in the 120. Meanwhile, 45 more speeders were ticketed in the 120 than the 121.